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New $10 bill featuring Viola Desmond goes into circulation next week

canada-man

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HALIFAX -- A new $10 banknote featuring Viola Desmond's portrait will go into circulation in a week, just over 72 years after she was ousted from the whites-only section of a movie theatre in New Glasgow, N.S.

The civil rights pioneer and businesswoman is the first Canadian woman to be featured on a regularly circulating banknote, which will also show a map of Halifax's historic north end, home to one of Canada's oldest black communities and the site where Desmond opened her first salon.

Irvine Carvery, a prominent member of Halifax's north end and a former school board chair, said he's excited that the bill will pay tribute to her, describing the inclusion of a black woman on the note as "a historic moment."

"What it means is that there's recognition in terms of the struggle that we, as African Canadians have gone through for all of our years of being here," he said.

"That was a pinnacle event, down in New Glasgow, when she refused to give up her seat. So to put her on the bill is, for me, a recognition that those struggles were real, and they continue through to today."

Carvery, 65, lives a stone's throw from Desmond's childhood home in north end Halifax and hopes to eventually see a commemorative marker on the house.

On Nov. 8, 1946 -- nearly a decade before Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a segregated bus in Alabama -- Desmond was dragged out of the Roseland Theatre by police, arrested, thrown in jail for 12 hours and fined.

It would take 63 years for Nova Scotia to issue Desmond, who died in 1965, a posthumous apology and pardon.

Carvery said he hopes the new bill will inspire young girls to pursue their dreams and push back against injustice, adding that he believes it will raise awareness for who Desmond was and what she accomplished.

"I'm hoping having Viola on the bill will prompt people to want to know what's the story behind her, because still, there's a lot of people who have no idea who she was and what she stands for," he said.

"Being on the $10 bill, people might want to say, 'who is that person? Let me do a little research."'

Desmond was selected to be on the bill after an open call for nominations and a public opinion survey on the Bank of Canada website.

The map shown behind Desmond's portrait includes the stretch of Gottingen Street, the city's north end's main drag, where the beautician opened a salon as part of a business that would eventually expand into her own line of cosmetics and a beauty school, which allowed her to mentor black women from across the country.

Her sister, Wanda Robson, has said that Desmond fought to overcome the many obstacles in her path to pursue her career: training as a beautician in Montreal, Atlantic City and New York when she was unable to study in Halifax because of the colour of her skin.

The new bill was first unveiled in Halifax on March 8 -- International Women's Day -- by Finance Minister Bill Morneau and Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz during a ceremony at the Halifax Central Library.

At the time, the Bank of Canada said in its materials on the new banknote that the community where Desmond lived and worked "served as a source of invaluable support during her struggle for justice."

They said the $10 bill will also be the first vertically oriented banknote in Canada, which would allow for a more prominent image of Desmond and differentiate it from the current polymer notes.

The note also includes a picture of the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, an excerpt from the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and an eagle feather, which the Bank of Canada said represents the "ongoing journey toward recognizing rights and freedoms for Indigenous Peoples in Canada."

The new $10 bill comes in a series of posthumous accolades for Desmond in recent years: in June, a Canada's Walk of Fame star was unveiled for her at the Halifax Ferry Terminal.

And in 2016, a new Halifax harbour ferry was named for Desmond following an online contest.

https://toronto.ctvnews.ca/new-10-b...ond-goes-into-circulation-next-week-1.4173376
 

bluebro69

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Jasmine Raine

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Not to take away from Viola but this is a politically correct bill hands down. Which just makes us look stupid.
 

Robert Mugabe

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A largely unreported and uncorroborated aspect of this story is that the white patrons had no objection to where she sat. The hubbub started more this way....
 

drooler

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Not to take away from Viola but this is a politically correct bill hands down. Which just makes us look stupid.
Agreed. Oh dearie me, decades ago there was a mean white person!

The media seems to have as its task the continual stirring of the pot to keep racialized minorities in a state of anger by constantly reprising everything bad that's ever happened.

People who constantly stoke conflict and division are damaging our country and playing with fire. They are creating a society of tribes that compete for ever-dwindling resources in a dirty zero-sum game that is fought out in the court room, in the lobbyist’s office and in the court of public opinion. Who wants to live in a place where people are constantly at each other’s throats, where there is never peace because everyone thinks other tribes have an unfair advantage at their own tribe’s expense?

The rifts in Canadian society are already deep and there is no shortage of angry people with massive chips on their shoulders. Enough already with picking open old wounds!!!
 

Nesbot

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Jan 25, 2016
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Why do some people hate progress? Honoring minorities that where treated poorly in Canada does NOT make us look stupid. On the contrary. It makes us look strong. Only a strong nation admits mistakes of the past, atones for them, and moves forward in a positive direction. The people who think honoring minorities is weak, are.....well...wrong.
 

Goodoer

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Feb 20, 2004
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GTA & Thereabouts...
Canadian bills are designed using themes for a certain number of years. If this generation is based on Rights activists (as opposed to birds, etc.), I'm cool with that.

But to quote "Macho Man" Randy Savage: "ELIZABETH!!!"
 

The Hof

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Why do some people hate progress? Honoring minorities that where treated poorly in Canada does NOT make us look stupid. On the contrary. It makes us look strong. Only a strong nation admits mistakes of the past, atones for them, and moves forward in a positive direction. The people who think honoring minorities is weak, are.....well...wrong.
I don’t totally disagree, but we should have put an aboriginal on the bill first. Second, get in a long line.

If we go through the historical list of poorly treated minorities I suspect, Irish, Scottish, Italian, Jewish, Chinese, Portuguese, Mennonites, non-gentry ad nauseoum.. are ahead of the line. Virtually every creed, culture, religion, caste was a mistreated minority. Do we disrespect them further by moving another group to the front of the line?

We truly and systematically screwed over the First Nations, we owe them. The rest is crowing from anyone else for going through what almost everyone else went through. At this point I get “representing”, but apologizing? Make it absolutely perfectly equal or you’re just part of the problem..... unless it for the aboriginals, they get apologies. They get words and deeds.
 

jcpro

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Jan 31, 2014
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I don’t totally disagree, but we should have put an aboriginal on the bill first. Second, get in a long line.

If we go through the historical list of poorly treated minorities I suspect, Irish, Scottish, Italian, Jewish, Chinese, Portuguese, Mennonites, non-gentry ad nauseoum.. are ahead of the line. Virtually every creed, culture, religion, caste was a mistreated minority. Do we disrespect them further by moving another group to the front of the line?

We truly and systematically screwed over the First Nations, we owe them. The rest is crowing from anyone else for going through what almost everyone else went through. At this point I get “representing”, but apologizing? Make it absolutely perfectly equal or you’re just part of the problem..... unless it for the aboriginals, they get apologies. They get words and deeds.
I agree. We should revive the one dollar note to slap Tecumseh on it. And put some Irish dude or lady on a two dollar note. The traitor Riel should get the three dollar one and a bearded Orthodox Jew on a four dollar bill.
 

corrie fan

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Nov 13, 2014
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This banknote is honouring a woman who stood up for herself against unfair treatment. That is something I admire. This is one way a society progresses, by individuals and groups pointing out injustice and demanding change.
 

oldjones

CanBarelyRe Member
Aug 18, 2001
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Is the Queen not on the bill?! Holy shit! That part doesn’t make the news?
Take a look at the 2018 Loonie: New portrait of the Queen that respectfully shows her age, but without any crown.
 

oldjones

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Aug 18, 2001
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Why is it sideways?
It's why they call that orientation 'portrait', while to one you're used to — cast your mind back to the days of scenery on the banknotes — is referred to as 'landscape'. If you're showing head and shoulders, it's better.
 
Ashley Madison
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